Eck Robertson

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sally Gooden 00:00 Tools
Brilliancy Medley 00:00 Tools
Sally Goodin' 03:39 Tools
Sallie Gooden 00:00 Tools
There's a Brown Skin Girl Down the Road Somewhere 00:00 Tools
Texas Wagoner 00:00 Tools
Ragtime Annie 00:00 Tools
Great Big Taters 00:00 Tools
Arkansas Traveler 00:00 Tools
Done Gone 00:00 Tools
Amarillo Waltz 00:00 Tools
Turkey In The Straw 00:00 Tools
Run Boy Run 00:00 Tools
There's A Brownskin Girl Down The Road Somewhere 00:00 Tools
Brillliancy Medley 00:00 Tools
arkansas traveller 00:00 Tools
The Island Unkown - Part 1 00:00 Tools
Leather Britches 00:00 Tools
Sally Johnson / Billy In The Low Ground 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown - Part 1 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown Part 2 00:00 Tools
sally johnson-billy in the lowground 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz Part 1 00:00 Tools
Say Old Man, Can You Play a Fiddle? 00:00 Tools
The Island Unkown - Part 2 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz Part 2 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown - Part 2 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz - Part 1 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz - Part 2 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown-Part 2 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown, Pt. 1 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown-Part 1 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown, Pt. 2 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown Part 1 00:00 Tools
Sally Johnson|Billy In The Low Ground 00:00 Tools
Lost Indian 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz-Part 1 00:00 Tools
Stumptown Stomp 00:00 Tools
Billy In The Lowground 00:00 Tools
Bonaparte's Retreat 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz-Part 2 00:00 Tools
Rye Whiskey 00:00 Tools
Girgsby's Hornpipe 00:00 Tools
Beaumont Rag 00:00 Tools
Grey Eagle 00:00 Tools
Sally Johnson/Billy in the Low Ground 00:00 Tools
Forky Deer 00:00 Tools
Dusty Miller 00:00 Tools
Eck Robertson - Ragtime Annie 00:00 Tools
Sally Johnson 00:00 Tools
Get Up in the Cool 00:00 Tools
Hell Among The Yearlings 00:00 Tools
Lost Goose 00:00 Tools
Hawk Got the Chicken 00:00 Tools
Unnamed D tune 00:00 Tools
there's a brownskin girl down the road 00:00 Tools
Sally Gooden                                  00:00 Tools
Sally Johnson Billy in the Low Ground 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown - Part II 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown - Part I 00:00 Tools
brillancy melody 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz Part II 00:00 Tools
There's a Brown Skin Gal Down the Road Somewhere 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown, Part I 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz, Part II 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz, Part I 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown, Part II 00:00 Tools
Eck Robertson And Family / Brilliancy Medley 00:00 Tools
the island unknown pt.1 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz Part I 00:00 Tools
Brilliancy Melody 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown, Part 2 00:00 Tools
The Island Unknown, Part 1 00:00 Tools
Brown Kelly Waltz, Part 2 00:00 Tools
Grigsby's Hornpipe 00:00 Tools
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Alexander "Eck" Robertson (born November 20, 1887 in Delaney, Arkansas, died February 15, 1975 in Borger, Texas) was an American fiddle player, mostly known for commercially recording the first country music songs in 1922 with Henry Gilliland. Robertson was born in Arkansas and grew up on a farm in the Texas panhandle where his family moved when he was three years old. His father, grandfather and uncles were fiddlers who competed in local contests. His father, a veteran of the Civil War, was also a farmer, and later quit fiddling to become a preacher. At the age of five, Robertson began learning to play the fiddle, and later learned banjo and guitar. In 1904, at the age of sixteen, he decided to become a professional musician and left home to travel with a medicine show through Indian Territory. In 1906 he married and settled in Vernon, Texas and became a piano tuner for the Total Line Music Company. Robertson and his wife Nettie performed at silent movie theaters and fiddling contests through the region. As the son of a Confederate veteran, Robertson was able to attend the annual Old Confederate Soldiers' Reunions across the South, and became a regular performer at these events. He met 74-year-old fiddler Henry C. Gilliland at one of these reunions, and the two began performing together. After the Richmond, Virginia reunion in June 1922, Gilliland and Robertson traveled to New York City, auditioned for and received a recording contract with the Victor Talking Machine Company. On Friday, June 30, 1922, Robertson and Gilliland recorded four fiddle duets for Victor. These probably represent the first commercial recordings of country music performers. Two of them, "Arkansaw Traveler" and "Turkey in the Straw", were released on Victor. Two others, "Forked Deer" and "Apple Blossom", were never issued. At the company's request, Robertson returned the next day, July 1, without Gilliland and recorded six additional sides. Four of them - "Sally Gooden", "Ragtime Annie", "Sally Johnson/Billy in the Low Ground" and "Done Gone" - were released on Victor over the next two years. The other two, "General Logan Reel/Dominion Hornpipe" and "Brilliancy and Cheatum", remain unissued. Robertson's rendition of "Sally Gooden" is now a classic since he played the traditional fiddle tune followed by 12 variations. Robertson's first record, with his solo "Sally Gooden" on one side and duet "Arkansaw Traveler" on the other, was released on September 1, 1922, but was not widely circulated until the spring of 1923. Sales figures are not known, but Victor did not promote the record strongly. His next two records were released in 1923 and 1924, but only after the summer of 1923, when Fiddlin' John Carson's recordings on Okeh Records kicked off a boom in old-time country music record sales. In 1925, Victor started using a new electrical recording process, but Robertson's 1922 acoustically made recordings continued to be made available for several years, being listed in “The Catalog of Victor Records 1930”. Robertson approached Victor about recording again, and in 1929 arranged to meet a Victor field recording engineer in Dallas, Texas. As Eck Robertson and Family he included this time his wife Nettie on guitar, his daughter Daphne on tenor guitar and his son Dueron on tenor banjo. On August 12, 1929 the group recorded four fiddle tunes - "Texas Wagoner", "There's a Brown Skin Gal Down the Road", "Amarillo Waltz" and "Brown Kelly Waltz". On October 10, the Robertson family band returned to Dallas and recorded two fiddle duets with Texas fiddler J. B. Cranfill, "Great Big Taters" and "Run Boy Run". Two additional tunes were recorded that evening, "Apple Blossom" and "My Frog Ain't Got No Blues", but were not issued. The next day, October 11, the band recorded "Brilliancy Medley", released in September 1930, included on the Anthology of American Folk Music, and the ballad "The Island Unknown", released in December 1929. That day the band also recorded three additional sides that were not released - "My Experience on the Ranch" and remakes of "Arkansaw Traveler" and "Sally Gooden". The week of September 20, 1940, Robertson recorded 100 fiddle tunes at Jack Sellers Studios in Dallas, Texas. Unfortunately, there is no song listing from these sessions, and none of the tunes have ever surfaced. Robertson continued to perform extensively at dances, theaters, fiddlers' conventions and on radio. In 1963, John Cohen, Mike Seeger and Tracy Schwarz visited Robertson at his home in Amarillo, Texas and taped some of his music, which was released on County Records as Eck Robertson, Famous Cowboy Fiddler. Robertson appeared at the UCLA Folk Festival in 1964, and at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965, accompanied by the New Lost City Ramblers. Robertson died in 1975 in Borger, Texas and was interred at the Westlawn Memorial Park Cemetery. His tombstone is engraved "World's Champion Fiddler." Discography 78 RPM 1922"Sally Gooden" / "Arkansaw Traveler"Victor18956Recorded 7/1/1922 and 6/30/1922, B side duet with Henry C. Gilliland 1923"Turkey in the Straw" / "Ragtime Annie"Victor19149Recorded 6/30/1922 and 7/1/1922, A side duet with Henry C. Gilliland 1924"Sally Johnson/Billy in the Low Ground" / "Done Gone"Victor19372Recorded 7/1/1922, with pianist Nat Shilkret 1929"Texas Wagoner" / "There's a Brown Skin Gal Down the Road"VictorV40145Recorded 8/12/1929, with wife, son and daughter. 1929"The Island Unknown Part 1" / "The Island Unknown Part 2"VictorV40166Recorded 10/11/1929, with wife, son and daughter. 1929"Run Boy Run" / "Great Big Taters"VictorV40205Recorded 10/10/1929, with J.B. Cranfill 1930"Brilliancy Medley" / "Amarillo Waltz"VictorV40298Recorded 10/11/1929 and 8/12/1929, with wife, son and daughter. 1930"Brown Kelly Waltz Part 1" / "Brown Kelly Waltz Part 2"VictorV40334Recorded 8/12/1929, with wife, son and daughter. Reissued as Bluebird 5777 and Montgomery Ward 4908 Albums 1989 Eck Robertson, Famous Cowboy FiddlerCounty2021963 field recording, Amarillo, Texas Compilations and reissues 1976 Master FiddlerSonyatoneSTR-201Reissue of the Victor recordings, 1922-1929 1998 Old-Time Texas Fiddler, County CO-3515 - CD-Reissue of the Victor recordings, 1922-1929 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.